Lesson Title

Lesson Design

Overview

Teaching: 10 min
Exercises: 0 min
Questions
  • How do we design lessons?

Objectives
  • Describe the reverse instructional design process.

  • Describe the purpose and implementation of formative assessments.

This episode describes how we go about designing lessons and why. For more information on how we design lessons and why, see the instructor training course.

Reverse Instructional Design

In principle, we design lessons in four stages:

  1. Conceptual: describe who the lesson is for, what its overall goals are, and how long it is going to be. For example, the lesson might be for people who have taught themselves how to write page-long statistical analyses in R using RStudio, but have never written functions or run programs from the Unix shell prompt. Its overall goal might be to teach them how to write modular multi-page programs and how to use dplyr to regularize their analyses, and the time allotted might be half a day. It’s often helpful to use concept maps in this stage.

  2. Summative Assessment: figure out what learners will do to demonstrate that they have mastered the material. This is the most important step of the four, since it is what actually determines the scope of the lesson. In this case, the summative assessment might be to write a four-function program to load, clean up, analyze, and plot a collection of medical data sets.

  3. Formative Assessments: describe the exercises that learners will do during the lesson. To switch examples for a moment, it wouldn’t be fair to ask someone to parallel park on a driving test if they’d never done it before, so two formative assessments in a driving course might be “back up” and “parallel park between some safety cones”.

  4. Connect the Dots: put the formative assessments in order and develop lesson episodes to go from one to the next. It is common to sketch a concept map for each lesson episode, both to outline its key ideas and to check that it’s not too big. The ordering of lesson episodes is constrained by dependencies but is usually not completely determined by them: there are often several different orders in which ideas can sensibly be introduced. It is common to discover a need for more formative assessments at this stage; to continue with the driving example, the lesson author might realize that a third exercise on turning while backing up is needed (since many people initially turn the steering wheel the wrong way when they’re in reverse).

In practice, the process often looks more like this:

  1. Draft the assumptions and major outcomes.

  2. Describe the summative assessments for each half day of material (i.e., one summative assessment for a three-hour lesson and two for a full-day lesson).

  3. Write a one- or two-line description of the formative assessments building up to those summative assessments. These should be paced at roughly 15-minute intervals, i.e., four per hour.

  4. Get early feedback from peers, particularly on how realistic the time estimates are.

  5. Do a second pass to flesh out the assumptions and assessments.

  6. Get more feedback.

  7. Start writing the lesson content.

Steps 1-6 are best done in a single Markdown file for easy review; if you are using this template, you should call it _extras/design.md. Once work starts on step 7, the detailed milestones should be moved into lesson episode files. For an example of this, see the novice Python lesson using the gapminder data.

What Makes a Good Formative Assessment

The two purposes of formative assessment are (a) to help learners prepare for the summative assessment and (b) to tell them and their instructor during the lesson whether they’re making progress (and if not, what obstacles they have hit). If lesson episodes are 10-15 minutes long, then formative assessments should take no more than 5 minutes. This means that formative assessments should be:

Good formative assessments do not require learners to write lots of code from scratch: it takes too long, there are usually too many possible right solutions to discuss in just a couple of minutes, and many novices find a blank page (or screen) intimidating.

Key Points